Quantemol Ltd
Quantemol Ltd
7 Projects, page 1 of 2
assignment_turned_in Project2015 - 2016Partners:University of Birmingham, Quantemol Ltd, University of Birmingham, Quantemol LtdUniversity of Birmingham,Quantemol Ltd,University of Birmingham,Quantemol LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/M022544/1Funder Contribution: 101,607 GBPThe dynamics of quantum particles is the basis to describing the material world. Collisions between nuclei provides basic chemical reactivity, while the movements of electrons around nuclei provides the fine mechanistic details. To understand these motions we need to solve the time-dependent Schroedinger equation - a non-trivial problem for more than 3 particles that requires a huge computational effort. State-of-the art experiments using attosecond or femtosecond pulses of radiation allow us to follow the motion of these particles, but without computer simulations the results are difficult to understand. This field of research is presently undergoing a huge expansion, due to the provision of new light sources such as free electron lasers (FELs), and software needs to be developed to keep up to the new capabilities. CCPQ has two community codes (R-matrix suite, MCTDH wavepacket dynamics) to treat these processes. The results give a deep inside into the fundamental reactivity of molecules, where quantum mechanical behaviour must be considered. The interactions of anti-matter particles are also a topic of much interest, primarily due to the use of positrons in medical imaging, but also as a field of fundamental science in experiments such as the ALPHA project. Here, anti-matter particles are collided with normal matter and the different decay channels investigated. CCPQ is developing a code in collaboration with experimentalists to help understand the behaviour of these exotic sounding, but useful, particles. Going from few bodies to many-bodies introduces some of the most fascinating phenomena in physics, such as superfluidity, superconductivity and ferroelectricity. However, to directly simulate them also introduces an exponentially scaling overhead in computation effort with the system size. While usually the preserve of condensed matter systems such strongly-correlated physics, where particles behaviour collectively, are now accessible in controlled ways with cold-atoms trapped in optical lattices. This has opened up previously inaccessible coherent dynamics in many-body systems to experimental scrutiny, such as examining what happens if the interaction and kinetic energies of particles are quenched across a quantum phase transition. The advances of this unique perspective are now reciprocating back to condensed matter problems where interaction of THz radiation on femtosecond timescales is also revealing correlated coherent electrons motion in solid-state systems. This topic of strongly-correlated many-body dynamics is the final strand of CCPQ development - embodied by the TNT project which introduces new ways of compressing many-body states to overcome the exponential barrier. It will support not only the emerging quantum technology of cold-atom quantum simulation, but also may eventually aid in designing and controlling real materials where optical pulses can switch properties such as superconductivity or ferroelectricity with great technological potential. CCPQ supports the development of these world leading community codes by providing a forum for the exchange of ideas, by providing networking opportunities for researchers to help disseminate the codes, and by supporting training workshops for users of the codes. It also provides direct support in the form of computer experts at the Daresbury laboratory who help optimise the codes for use on large high performance computers (HPC).
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2024 - 2032Partners:COMSOL Ltd, Lumai Ltd, Quantemol Ltd, Menlo Systems GmbH, ORCA Computing Ltd +46 partnersCOMSOL Ltd,Lumai Ltd,Quantemol Ltd,Menlo Systems GmbH,ORCA Computing Ltd,ADS Group Limited,The Technology Partnership Plc (TTP),Jeol UK Ltd,Photonic Solutions Plc,Attocube Systems,CMC Microsystems,NIMS,ACD/Labs,Loxham Precision,QinetiQ,Quantum Dice,Aquark Technologies,AWE plc,NKT Photonics A/S,York Probe Sources Ltd,Universal Quantum Ltd,Optica,Unitary Fund,AegiQ,Bruker BioSpin,QLM TECHNOLOGY LTD,Roke Manor Research Ltd,National Physical Laboratory NPL,Toshiba Europe Limited (UK),Nuvu Cameras Inc.,ZURICH INSTRUMENTS AG,Keysight Technologies (International),The MathWorks Inc,Xanadu,THALES UK LIMITED,Quandela SAS,Merqury Cybersecurity,Oxford Instruments Plasma Technology,University of Southampton,Japan Adv Inst of Sci & Tech (JAIST),Quantum Detectors,G&H Torqay,Element Six (UK) Ltd,Analog Devices Inc (Global),Duality Quantum Photonics Ltd,Oxford Ionics,National Institute R&D Microtechnologies,nVIDIA,BAE Systems,Riverlane,QuiX Quantum B.V.Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/Y035267/1Funder Contribution: 7,844,490 GBPQuantum technologies exploit the intriguing properties of matter and light that emerge when the randomizing processes of everyday situations are subdued. Particles then behave like waves and, like the photons in a laser beam, can be split and recombined to show interference, providing sensing mechanisms of exquisite sensitivity and clocks of exceptional accuracy. Quantum measurements affect the systems they measure, and guarantee communication security by destroying cryptographic keys as they are used. The entanglement of different atoms, photons or circuits allows massively powerful computation that promises complex optimizations, ultrafast database searches and elusive mathematical solutions. These quantum technologies, which EPSRC has declared one of its four Mission-Inspired priorities, promise in the near future to stand alongside electronics and laser optics as a major technological resource. In this 'second quantum revolution', a burgeoning quantum technology industry is translating academic research and laboratory prototypes into practical devices. Our commercial partners - global corporations, government agencies, SMEs, start-ups, a recruitment agency and VC fund - have identified a consistent need for hundreds of doctoral graduates who combine deep understanding of quantum science with engineering competence, systems insight and a commercial head. With our partners' guidance, we have designed an exciting programme of taught modules to develop knowledge, skills and awareness beyond the provision of traditional science-focused PhD programmes. While pursuing leading-edge research in quantum science and engineering, graduate students in the EPSRC CDT for Quantum Technology Engineering will follow a mix of lectures, practical assignments and team work, peer learning, workshops, and talks by our commercial partners. They will strengthen their scientific and engineering capabilities, develop their computing and practical workshop skills, study systems engineering and nanofabrication, project and risk management and a range of commercial topics, and receive professional coaching in communication and presentation. An industrial placement and extended study visit will give them experience of the commercial environment and global links in their chosen area, and they will have support and opportunities to break their studies to explore the commercialization of research inventions. A QT Enterprise Club will provide fresh, practical entrepreneurship advice, as well as a forum for local businesses to exchange experience and expertise. The CDT will foster an atmosphere of team working and collaboration, with a variety of group exercises and projects and constant encouragement to learn from and about each other. Students will act as mentors to junior colleagues, and be encouraged to take an active interest in each other's research. They will benefit from the diversity of their peers' backgrounds, across not just academic disciplines but also career stages, with industry secondees and part-time students bringing rich experience and complementary expertise. Students will draw upon the wealth of experience, across all corners of quantum technologies and their underpinning science and techniques, provided by Southampton's departments of Physics & Astronomy, Engineering, Electronics & Computer Science, Chemistry and its Optoelectronics Research Centre. They will be given training and opening credit for the Zepler Institute's nanofabrication facilities, and access to the inertial testing facilities of the Institute of Sound & Vibration research and the trials facilities of the National Oceanography Centre. Our aim is that graduates of the CDT will possess not only a doctorate in the exciting field of quantum technology, but a wealth of knowledge, skills and awareness of the scientific, technical and commercial topics they will need in their future careers to propel quantum technologies to commercial success.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2008 - 2012Partners:UCL, Quantemol Ltd, Quantemol LtdUCL,Quantemol Ltd,Quantemol LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: ST/F011687/1Funder Contribution: 77,998 GBPThere is a growing realisation that small molecules exist not just in quiescent cool clouds but also in much more active astrophysical regions such as planetary nebulae and diffuse interstellar clouds. These regions often contain significant numbers of free, quasi-thermal electrons, up to 10-4 compared to molecular hydrogen. These electrons can effect chemical change and drive observable spectroscopy processes (see A.J. Lim, I. Rabadan and J. Tennyson, MNRAS, 306, 473 (1999) for example); the cross sections between electrons and molecular ions are particularly large. Additionally electron molecule collisions are important elsewhere, for example they are the main driver behind planetary aurorae and many molecular masers. Models of all these regimes require data which is largely unknown and, in many cases, cannot be determined from laboratory based measurements. Over the last two decades the UCL group has developed the UK molecular R-matrix codes to provide a first principles, quantum mechanical treatment of the collision between low energy electrons and small molecules. This code has been used to treat collisions leading to rotational excitation involving important astrophysical ions (see for example A. Faure and J. Tennyson, MNRAS, 325, 443 (2001)) and the strongly dipolar water molecule (A. Faure, J.D. Gorfinkiel and J. Tennyson, MNRAS 347, 323 (2004)). However these treatments are still very limited in their scope. Thus, for example, calculations on electron collisions with water which are important for models of water masers and cometary emissions, and will undoubtedly be needed to interpret observations from ESA's forthcoming Herschel mission, need to be extended to treat both much higher rotational levels and vibrational motion. Recent observations of molecular emissions from C-shocked regions of the ISM (Jimenez-Serra et al, ApJ 650, L135 (2007)) showed that it is possible to recover local electron densities by using electron molecule collisions calculations (this work used ones performed by the proposer). The present proposal is for a PhD student who will use the QuantemolN implementation of the UK polyatomic R- matrix code to study electron collisions with molecules of astrophysical interest such as OH and SiO. Similar electron collisions with C2, important in cometary tails and elsewhere, will also be attempted. The QuantemolN code, which will be provided by the company, is very suitable for these studies since it is an expert system which greatly increases the ease and speed with which a user can perform very technically demanding electron collision calculations. In return the student will assist the company in adding further features to this code, for example to treat rotational and vibrational excitation. Adding to the functionality of the code is a strategic aim of Quantemol. The student will be provided training in performing electron molecule collision calculations, interpreting the results and using them in astronomical models and to interpret astronomical spectra. S/he will interact with people directly observing the processes, several of whom (for example Dr J Rawlings and Dr S Viti) are at UCL. S/he will also experience working with a small start up company which gives the opportunity to be involved both in the software development and in the interaction with other users of the code. This proposal follows a highly successful CASE studentship award (now in its final year) to Mr HN Varambhia who has both QuantemolN to do studies on HCN, HNC, CO and other astrophysically important systems (Eg Varambhia et al, Electron-impact rotational excitation of HCN, HNC, DCN and DNC, MNRAS in press) which has been of immense benefit to the company by raising its scientific profile which led to new orders for the existing Quantemol-N package and interest in both Quantemol-N and Quantemol-P from both the UK and abroad.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2017 - 2020Partners:UCL, QUB, Quantemol Ltd, Max Born Institute for Nonlinear Optics, Quantemol Ltd +4 partnersUCL,QUB,Quantemol Ltd,Max Born Institute for Nonlinear Optics,Quantemol Ltd,Science and Technology Facilities Council,STFC - Laboratories,STFC - LABORATORIES,Max Born Institute for Nonlinear OpticsFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/P022146/1Funder Contribution: 433,574 GBPIn this project, we will develop new software for the accurate description of atoms and molecular systems in intense, ultra-short light fields with arbitrary polarisation. This involves generalising two world-leading suites of codes: The R-matrix with time-dependence codes (RMT) for ultra-fast atomic dynamics and the UKRmol+ suite for electron/positron scattering and photoionisation processes in molecules. By making these codes available to the wider community, in a form that can be easily used and efficiently run, we will help build the software infrastructure in the UK. Significant development in laser technology over the last couple of decades has led to the birth of attosecond science: lasers are now available that can produce extremely short pulses (around 0.1 femtosecond or 10(-16) s in duration) to image and control the motion of electrons in atoms and molecules. This development has, for example, enabled scientists to 'see' how charge is transferred in a molecule after it is ionised, a process that has biological importance (for example, in photosynthesis). Light can be treated as an electromagnetic wave; the direction in which the electric field oscillates defines the polarisation of the light. This polarisation, in turn, determines how the light interacts with matter. Until very recently intense, ultra-short light pulses were linearly polarised. However, it has recently become possible to generate laser pulses with different types of polarisation. New scientific research areas and new opportunities have become available via these latest technological developments. With control over the polarisation of light pulses, one can control the electron dynamics and even fine-tune it: In simple terms, using light pulses which oscillate in more than one-dimension gives an additional control parameter in experiments, and this is the underlying mechanism in so-called multidimensional spectroscopy. This field is becoming increasingly interesting, as experiments begin to probe the interface of the quantum and classical worlds. In addition, light pulses with elliptical polarisation will enable the detailed study of electron dynamics in chiral molecules. (Chiral molecules are those that cannot be superimposed to their mirror images, like human hands). These molecules are immensely interesting: a lot of biologically important molecules, like the amino acids and sugars that are building blocks of living organisms are 'homochiral': only one variant is present in life (but never its mirror image). New computer codes, which can handle general atomic and molecular systems in arbitrarily polarised light are needed to complement experimental advances, to assist in their theoretical interpretation and also to guide them. At present, the RMT codes can model atoms in a linearly polarised light field. Expanding them to treat the effect of arbitrarily polarised light is a substantial task: It requires lifting symmetry restrictions which have limited the size of previous calculations, and consequently a significant improvement in the codes' efficiency to account for the much larger-scale calculations will be necessary. In addition, we will massively expand the impact of the method by developing an equivalent method to treat molecules in a time-dependent fashion. The data needed to study the effect of the laser pulses on molecules will be generated by the UKRmol+ suite. This, in turn, requires the overhauling of these codes so they can produce sufficiently accurate input in an efficient way. The computational development within this project will be strongly connected to the CCPQ community, which involves research groups across the UK developing scientific software for use in atomic and molecular physics and computational chemistry. Through CCPQ we will not only share the suites of codes, but also the expertise and software development skills gained.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2016 - 2021Partners:UCL, Quantemol Ltd, Quantemol LtdUCL,Quantemol Ltd,Quantemol LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/M022544/2Funder Contribution: 89,022 GBPThe dynamics of quantum particles is the basis to describing the material world. Collisions between nuclei provides basic chemical reactivity, while the movements of electrons around nuclei provides the fine mechanistic details. To understand these motions we need to solve the time-dependent Schroedinger equation - a non-trivial problem for more than 3 particles that requires a huge computational effort. State-of-the art experiments using attosecond or femtosecond pulses of radiation allow us to follow the motion of these particles, but without computer simulations the results are difficult to understand. This field of research is presently undergoing a huge expansion, due to the provision of new light sources such as free electron lasers (FELs), and software needs to be developed to keep up to the new capabilities. CCPQ has two community codes (R-matrix suite, MCTDH wavepacket dynamics) to treat these processes. The results give a deep inside into the fundamental reactivity of molecules, where quantum mechanical behaviour must be considered. The interactions of anti-matter particles are also a topic of much interest, primarily due to the use of positrons in medical imaging, but also as a field of fundamental science in experiments such as the ALPHA project. Here, anti-matter particles are collided with normal matter and the different decay channels investigated. CCPQ is developing a code in collaboration with experimentalists to help understand the behaviour of these exotic sounding, but useful, particles. Going from few bodies to many-bodies introduces some of the most fascinating phenomena in physics, such as superfluidity, superconductivity and ferroelectricity. However, to directly simulate them also introduces an exponentially scaling overhead in computation effort with the system size. While usually the preserve of condensed matter systems such strongly-correlated physics, where particles behaviour collectively, are now accessible in controlled ways with cold-atoms trapped in optical lattices. This has opened up previously inaccessible coherent dynamics in many-body systems to experimental scrutiny, such as examining what happens if the interaction and kinetic energies of particles are quenched across a quantum phase transition. The advances of this unique perspective are now reciprocating back to condensed matter problems where interaction of THz radiation on femtosecond timescales is also revealing correlated coherent electrons motion in solid-state systems. This topic of strongly-correlated many-body dynamics is the final strand of CCPQ development - embodied by the TNT project which introduces new ways of compressing many-body states to overcome the exponential barrier. It will support not only the emerging quantum technology of cold-atom quantum simulation, but also may eventually aid in designing and controlling real materials where optical pulses can switch properties such as superconductivity or ferroelectricity with great technological potential. CCPQ supports the development of these world leading community codes by providing a forum for the exchange of ideas, by providing networking opportunities for researchers to help disseminate the codes, and by supporting training workshops for users of the codes. It also provides direct support in the form of computer experts at the Daresbury laboratory who help optimise the codes for use on large high performance computers (HPC).
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